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The first computer I can remember being in our house was the Deskpro 386. The first computer I bought for myself was a Windows 98 machine in 1998 with a 3DFX Monster video card! Played Diablo and and was soon hooked!
The discussion revolves around participants sharing their experiences with their first computers, including various models and specifications. The scope includes personal anecdotes, nostalgia, and reflections on early computing technology.
Participants generally share personal stories without significant disagreement, though there is a light-hearted debate about the age of participants and the evolution of computing technology.
Some statements reflect personal nostalgia and subjective experiences, which may not align with broader historical timelines or technological advancements.


lekh2003 said:I feel like an odd one out, everybody here has first computers from the time when computers were classified as items which did calculations![]()
Well then, is the human mind a computer?jedishrfu said:That's okay just tell them about your abacus and counting stones... or the antikythera device which ever is older.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abacus
or rolling stones for rounded calculations:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rolling_Stones
lekh2003 said:Well then, is the human mind a computer?
That was my second computer. The first was a Radio Shack hand-held computer that I bought in 1980. It had BASIC in ROM, and a whopping 2KB of RAM. I bought a printer/modem unit for it so I could print out the programs I wrote, and store them on a mini-cassette. One of the programs I wrote calculated an amortization table for a mortgage.Nidum said:Apple IIe was first personal computer actually owned by me .
I never hit the bug, but I submitted a short x86 assembly program to "PC Techniques," a magazine published by Jeff Dunteman, in the June/July issue in '94. The program would tell you whether the CPU in your computer had the broken division logic. As far as I know, this was the first program published about this problem. Although Intel at first brushed it off, the flaw eventually cost Intel over $1 Billion.jedishrfu said:Did you hit the famous pentium bug?
Hey, don't be trashing CP/M ... that was a major upgrade for me from my first DOS machine. It was a lot better than DOS and I re-wrote much of the BIOS and added some extensions of my own. Had my own EPROM-burner and UV eraser.QuantumQuest said:An Amstrad CPC 6128 with an "OS" - I can't resist putting quotes for that operating system, CP/M loaded from a floppy. Then a 386 and I went on in the path of Intel for the last 28 years for both desk - and lap - top.
phinds said:Hey, don't be trashing CP/M ... that was a major upgrade for me from my first DOS machine. It was a lot better than DOS and I re-wrote much of the BIOS and added some extensions of my own. Had my own EPROM-burner and UV eraser.
Yeah, I know what you mean. I've watched the evolution of personal computing from the earliest days and it has been truly astounding to see it evolve. I can remember things like my excitement when I got my very own hard drive, 10 megs. Today that's not even enough for a single raw image file and barely enough for a couple of JPEG files straight out of the camera, but it was a super thing to have back when I got it.QuantumQuest said:Yes you're right, I just couldn't resist to put it in quotes comparing to what an OS is today but of course it was very good for its time.